There’s no question that the 2016 presidential election left an indelible mark on the United States, unearthed deep-seated attitudes, amplified critical national conversations and influenced America’s reputation on the global stage.

The subjects of who Americans are, what America represents and how the country might begin to bridge the current political chasm and alleviate internal dysfunction were on the minds of audience members and speakers alike at The Atlantic’s “Recoding the Republic” conference, held Thursday at the UCLA Meyer and Renee Luskin Conference Center.

“Our purpose today is to explore what can be done to bridge this country’s many divides,” said Margaret Low, president of AtlanticLIVE, the events division of The Atlantic, the magazine established in 1857 that offers news and analysis on politics, business, culture, technology and life. “America has always been a nation of differences, races, classes, tribes, teams, parties, rugged individualism and different groups fighting for a place at the table, but I think it’s fair to say that the 2016 election exposed new and perhaps deeper fault lines than we knew were there — fault lines that seemed to be growing deeper and wider by the day.”

Exploration of the American ideal was a founding mission of the magazine, said Low, adding that there was a belief that there was something exceptional about America, democracy, rights, equality, liberty for all and a government that represented the people.

The event drew an eclectic audience for lively and interactive conversations between Atlantic editors and writers and invited guests that included Rep. Ted Lieu, a Democrat who represents California’s 33rd congressional district, which includes UCLA and Westwood; Franklin Leonard, founder of The Black List, a website that identifies screenplays with promising production potential; Pedro Noguera, distinguished professor of education at the UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies and director of the Center for the Transformation of Schools; Andy Richter, actor, writer and “Conan” sidekick; and Caitlin Flanagan, a contributing editor at the Atlantic.

Chancellor Gene Block gives opening remarks at The Atlantic’s “Recoding the Republic”, held at the UCLA Meyer and Renee Luskin Conference Center on May 31.

“This is clearly a divisive moment in America,” said UCLA Chancellor Gene Block in his welcome remarks. “That culture of division is sometimes reflected on campus, where we too struggle with complicated issues such as free speech issues.” Block added that healthy dialogue and debate arecritical, as is listening to the opinions of others, regardless of whether one agrees with what is being said.

“We strive for respectful dialogue and open discussion, but preserving both really poses constant challenges for us, and this is always top of my mind when we have invited speakers that we can have a venue where people can speak about really impactful, but also controversial issues and be allowed to speak freely and receive a respectful reception,” Block said.

Segmented into seven distinct discussions, the conversations explored the history of the United States, the current social and political climate, American exceptionalism, and the roles that entertainment, media, technology, digital privacy, education, immigration, identity and free speech play in our national fracture and its repair. The topic of the American Dream was also touched on, in the panels and before the May 31 event inconversations on campus at UCLA.

The event opened with a discussion between Jeffery Goldberg, editor in chief at The Atlantic, and Amy Chua, a professor at the Yale School of Law and author of the book “Political Tribes,” about the state of the American Dream and the impact that nationalism, shifting demographics, identity and patriotism have played in the current state of the country.

“Patriotism is not just about singing the anthem very loudly,” said Chua. “If you want a really unified country, and to give meaning to this idea of a strong America, it has to be a country where the Constitutional rights feel real and legitimate to all groups. If you come from a marginalized group and every day your experience is that your group isn’t afforded the same dignity and respect as other more powerful groups why would you believe in these principles of equality and liberty? They just ring hollow. So the task is partly to make those ideals real.”

Congressman Lieu, who sits on the House Judiciary Committee and the House Foreign Affairs Committee and is an assistant whip for the Democratic caucus, spoke with Steve Clemons, The Atlantic’s Washington editor at large and gave a behind the curtain look at politics in Washington. Lieu also shared his views on the Trump Administration and the political landscape.

“I did not set out to resist this president,” said Lieu, noting that he issued a statement after the election that supported a peaceful transfer of power and urging people to give Trump a chance to govern. “About two months later I concluded I was wrong. And it wasn’t because we disagreed on policy issues. It was because he was attacking the institutions of our democracy; the First Amendment and the free press, attacking the legitimacy of judiciary, he was stifling internal dissent and then he was lying at a rate I’ve never seen a human being lie.”

But, said Lieu, that doesn’t mean that Trump doesn’t get some things right, adding that said he supports Trump’s decision to pass “right to try” legislation, which allows gravely ill patients the ability to try experimental drugs, and his decision to withdraw from negotiating the Trans Pacific-Partnership.

He does not support Trump’s recent decision to impose trade tariffs, a position that Trump announced just hours before the UCLA conference.

U.S. Rep. Ted Lieu in conversation with Steve Clemons from The Atlantic.

“I could if I thought there was an overall strategy to it,” said Lieu, who has developed a strong following by voicing his opinions of Twitter. “What I see is him saying he wants to do something, then he pulls back, then he sometimes does it, sometimes he doesn’t. If it was clear to me that there was this grand strategy I could support it.”

Frankin Leonard from The Black List and Alison Stewart, a contributing editor at The Atlantic, spoke about the role that film and television have historically had in crafting people’s social attitudes and perceptions of people of color, the need for inclusivity when it comes to the people who are creating content and making decisions about the types of projects that get made, and how to increase diversity in storytelling.

“I think that Hollywood likes to wrap itself in the mantle of sort of being a bastion of progressive politics and equality, but when you look at the content that we make I don’t see it as well reflected there,” said Franklin, whose list has helped to launch 300 screenplays into feature films, including “Slumdog Millionaire,” “The King’s Speech,” “Argo” and “Spotlight,” since its inception in 2005. “It’s not a coincidence to me that people are chantingbuild the wall at Trump rallies when in the rare event that Latino immigrants are shown on screen or on television, 50 percent of them are engaged in criminal activity. I don’t think it’s a coincidence that Roy Moore gets 48 percent of the vote in Alabama when young women between the ages of 12 and 18 are just as likely to be sexualized on screen as women between the ages of 19 and 29.”

“There was, I think, both realism and optimism that coursed through the conversation today as we contemplated how do we unify a fractious nation,” said The Atlantic’s Margaret Low. “I hope you all leave feeling challenged and invigorated by the ideas you heard. We are so grateful to UCLA for making this possible.”